- ЈезикAfrikaans Argentina Azərbaycanca
Bahasa Indonesia Brasil Brezhoneg
Català Česky Dansk
Deutsch Dhivehi English
English English Español
Esperanto Estonian Euskara
Finnish Français Français
Gaeilge Galego Hrvatski
Íslenska Italiano Latviešu
Lëtzebuergesch Lietuviu Magyar
Malay México Nederlands
Norsk bokmål Norwegian nynorsk Polski
Português Română Slovenšcina
Slovensky Srpski Svenska
Tiếng Việt Türkçe Wolof
Ελληνικά Български Македонски
Монгол Русский Српски
Українська עברית العربية (مصر)
العربية العربية پارسی
कोंकणी বাংলা ગુજરાતી
தமிழ் ಕನ್ನಡ ภาษาไทย
ქართული ខ្មែរ 中文 (繁體)
中文 (香港) 日本語 简体中文
한국어
Почетна 7463
- Bunnies on seesaw
The seesaw has a music button hidden in its base. These bunnies were very quick to make since they're only about 6" tall; I finished the whole thing -- bunnies, clothing and seesaw -- in less than a week. The seesaw is made of a plastic canvas base (filled with navy beans to give it weight; the book suggested unpopped popcorn, but the beans were what I had and they work fine), and a ruler covered in plastic canvas for the board part. The whole thing has a crocheted cover, of course. Everything else is just plain worsted-weight yarn stuffed with polyester fiberfill, including the seesaw handles. They are now happily see-sawing in my mom's house. Pattern Source: Leisure Arts leaflet #2474, Musical Cute Couples to Crochet. The leaflet is also available from Country Yarns. - Gingerbread house - back
See "front" photo for pattern source. - bikefriday1.jpg
Made especially for me! - Tiny chair
This tiny (only a couple inches high) Victorian chair was made with size-10 thread and stiffened with Stiffy. The chair legs are beads and pins. Pattern Source: A South Maid leaflet entitled Victorian Crochet Miniatures. It says, "Article J-24" and "Book 2413" on the front. Sorry, I'm not sure where I got this, but I think it might have been from Herrschners. - Cat table runner
I only have a photocopy, but I've been told that this pattern comes from White Crochet magazine, Vol. 2, No. 1, 1991. Another helpful person says it also appeared in White Crochet Christmas Vol. 5, No. 1, in 1993. Sorry, but I have no info on how to obtain back issues of these publications. - Baby afghan (close-up)
Close-up of baby afghan; see previous photo for description and pattern source. - Tiny thread teddy bear
Pattern Source: The bear and hat pattern can be found in the Victorian Ponies and Bears leaflet -- see the previous photo of the carousel for more info. The dress was a free-form, original pattern that I did not write down. - Lapel flowers
Pattern Source: Crochet For Today. - IM000207.jpg
The view out to sea off Waikiki beach - Mouse with Christmas lights
This adorable little guy is from the big Vanna collection book. I couldn't resist making him, he's so cute tangled up in his Christmas lights! Pattern Source: This book is not available except as a package kind of thing from Oxmoor House -- they send you two packets of patterns a month, each set costing $15, until the book is filled. The pattern might have been published in another Leisure Arts book, but I haven't seen it anywhere else. - raysweater_006.jpg
Close-up of Ray's sweater. The pattern is basically stockinette with "stripes" made of twisted knits (knit through back loop) surrounded by purls. See previous photo for pattern source. - ray-costume
Ray's new Renaissance Fair costume. Isn't he a swashbuckler? - IM000208.jpg
Diamond Head as seen from Waikiki beach - "Martina"
[10/18/2005] My fifth knitted sweater. Pattern Source: This is from Adrienne Vittadini's Fall 2004 pattern book. - Seesaw bunnies (other side view)
See previous photo for description and pattern source.